From the DW:
“German government bans Hezbollah
— Interior Ministry”
Authorities have designated
Hezbollah a terrorist organization and banned its activity on German soil.
Police conducted raids on four associations linked to the Islamist group. German
Interior Minister Horst Seehofer on Thursday banned all Hezbollah activities in
the country, his ministry spokesman said on Twitter. He also confirmed that "police measures
are underway in several federal states concurrently," and added that even
in times of crisis, the "rule of law is able to act." The police
raids were focused on four mosque associations in Berlin, Dortmund, Bremen and
Münster accused of belonging to Hezbollah. Hezbollah is a Lebanese Shiite
organization consisting of a political and a militant branch. It receives
significant backing from Iran and has fought alongside the troops of Syrian
President Bashar Assad. Germany had
previously distinguished between the group's political and militant arms, but
on Thursday the country classified the group in its entirety as a terrorist
organization. "Hezbollah openly calls for the violent elimination of the
State of Israel and questions the right of the State of Israel to exist,"
the Interior Ministry said in a statement. "The organization is therefore
fundamentally against the concept of international understanding, regardless of
whether it presents itself as a political, social or military structure."
What does the ban mean — at home
and abroad? The ban essentially
criminalizes public expression of support for Hezbollah within Germany. Followers
can no longer display the flag of the Lebanese militia, a green rifle on a
yellow background. Additionally, the total ban has effectively made it easier
for authorities to take action against the group, which in turn makes it more
difficult for Hezbollah to conduct transnational activities using Germany as a
transit point. Banning Hezbollah could
strain relations between Germany and Iran. However, Iran is dependent on good
relations with Germany and the European Union, exemplified most recently by the
use of Instex, an EU-Iran trading mechanism designed to skirt US-imposed
sanctions and export medical supplies to the pandemic-hit country. The ban
also risks impacting Germany's relationship with Lebanon, as the organization
has been represented as part of the Lebanese National Assembly since 1992 and
makes up around 10% of all Lebanese parliamentarians. Many German politicians
have opposed a total ban, saying allowing Hezbollah's political arm to exist is
essential to maintaining relations with Lebanon. Kathrin Vogler, a spokesperson on peace policy
for the Left Party parliamentary group, told DW last year that banning
Hezbollah would not improve the security situation but would make things worse
for it in the future, as the move gives the impression that Germany is siding
with US demands. "This should be rejected with the necessary
clarity," she said.
Initial reactions: However, other German and international
politicians and leaders welcomed the German ban. Omid Nouripour, the foreign
policy spokesperson of the Green Party in the German parliament said banning
Hezbollah in Germany was "absolutely correct." Nouripour told DW that
Hezbollah was "trying to find funding in Germany for their work in Lebanon
and in Syria, and they are trying to recruit people. This is not something we
can accept on our soil." The American Jewish Committee (AJC) praised
Germany's move to ban Hezbollah, calling it a "welcome, much-anticipated
and significant German decision" in a statement. "We now hope other European nations will
take a close look at Germany's decision and reach the same conclusion about the
true nature of Hezbollah," wrote AJC CEO David Harris. "Permitting
its [Hezbollah's] 'political' wing to operate on European soil allows for
active recruitment, fundraising, and the poisonous spread of
anti-Semitism," the statement read. Israel's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Israel
Katz, issued similar praise for the decision. "In my conversations with
[German Foreign Minister] Heiko Maas, he promised to help and I thank
him," Katz tweeted. "Hezbollah is a terrorist organization & must
be treated as such." Maas tweeted,
"Hezbollah denies Israel's right to exist, threatens violence and terror
and continues to massively upgrade its missile arsenal. In Germany, we have to
exhaust the rule of law to tackle Hezbollah's criminal and terrorist
activities."
How did the Hezbollah ban in
Germany arise?: Authorities estimate
around 1,050 people in Germany are active members of the Lebanese militant
group. Pressure had been mounting on Germany to ban all arms of the
organization since before 2013. However, international calls to do so became
louder after the UK implemented an outright ban on the group in February of
last year. In response, Niels Annen,
the deputy minister in the Foreign Ministry, told news magazine Der Spiegel
that Germany would not declare Hezbollah a terrorist organization. The movement
was a prominent part of Lebanese society and part of the country's political
landscape, he said. In September, the now-US acting Director of National
Intelligence and US Ambassador to Germany Richard Grenell published an op-ed in
German daily Die Welt, formally calling for a ban on the group, saying that it
sponsors terrorism and anti-Semitism. The
AJC's Harris echoed that sentiment in October, following a shooting at a Halle
synagogue, which left two people dead and two injured. Just a month later, however, the Interior
Ministry denied that an outright ban of Hezbollah was under consideration,
following reports that the ministry had been moving closer to an agreement on a
total ban.
A group with international ties: Hezbollah maintains close ties with Iran
and is seen by many as an extension of the Iranian regime. According to Nathan
Sales, the coordinator for counterterrorism within the US Department of State,
Iran provides Hezbollah's Lebanon chapter with over $700 million (€643 million)
per year, while the group's annual budget is estimated to be around $1 billion.
Within that financing mechanism,
Hezbollah makes an estimated $300 million per year through international
transactions, including drug smuggling and trafficking in counterfeit products.
In order to conduct such activities on such a broad international scale, the
group needs strong international roots — not just a foothold within the Middle
East. Some experts and diplomats have
said that by allowing the political arm of Hezbollah to thrive in Germany, the
government had effectively made the country a hotbed for money laundering. "Germany is incredibly important for
Hezbollah, because Germany is an Eldorado for money laundering," political
scientist and scholar of Islam Ralph Ghadban told DW. US Ambassador Grenell had echoed that
sentiment in his calls to ban the group.
Rise of Hezbollah: Hezbollah, or Party of God, was conceived by
Muslim clerics in the 1980s in response to the Israeli invasion of South
Lebanon in 1982. The Shiite group has a political and military wing. The Shiite Islamist political, military and
social organization wields considerable power in Lebanon. It has been headed by
Hassan Nasrallah since 1992. Hezbollah —
which literally means the Party of God — emerged with the support of Iran
during the Israeli occupation of Lebanon in the early 1980s, though its
ideological roots date back to the 1960s. The group's exact origins are
difficult to pinpoint. Hezbollah also backs the government of Lebanese Prime
Minister Hassan Diab, which took office in January. Every evening at 1830 UTC,
DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature
journalism. Sign up to receive it directly here.
^ This is long over-due, but I’m
glad Germany is finally doing it. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/german-government-bans-hezbollah-interior-ministry/a-53287126
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